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Measuring Crime
Description
A Levels Psychology (FORENSICS) Mind Map on Measuring Crime, created by riacooke4 on 09/04/2014.
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forensics
psychology
psychology
forensics
a levels
Mind Map by
riacooke4
, updated more than 1 year ago
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Created by
riacooke4
over 10 years ago
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Resource summary
Measuring Crime
Official Statistics
Based on crimes reported to police and recorded in official figures
Hollin (1992) suggested that the OCS only accounts for 25% of actual crime
'Dark figure' of crime: offences that are unreported or don't appear in the OCS
Reasons why crimes are not reported
There is no victim
Victim is too afraid
Too trivial
Can't be bothered/inconvenient
Mistrust the police
Perpetrator is a friend or family member
Reasons why crimes are not recorded
Insufficient time
Too trivial
Not a priority
Lack of evidence
One of several similar offences
Victim withdraws charge
Police recording rules
Officially recorded crime is affected by what are known as police recording rules
Determine whether or not a crime is deemed recordable by authorities
Can vary according to priority of government and individual police force
Victim Surveys
Asking people if they have been victims over a specific time period
CSEW carried out roughly every 2 years
Interviews with a huge sample
Participants are people aged over 16 from randomly selected households
In 2006/7 it was based on a sample of over 47,000 people, plus a booster sample of 4,000 people aged between 16 and 24
Booster sample was necessary as many of original randomly selected people from this age group had decline
Participants were asked if they had been a victim of crime in the last year
Interviews were structured, pre-set questions with optional responses
Survey showed victim reports were greater than police statistics
CSEW also collects information about fear of crime and attitudes to crime
Carried a recommendation that the survey should cover under 16s by conducting interviews with 10 to 15 year olds as well
CSEW is the largest and most influential of victim surveys
There are more specific surveys e.g Commercial Victimisation Survey
Problems in defining crime
Factors that need to be considered when defining a crime
Historical context
What is defined as a crime at one point in time might not be considered to be a crime at a different point in time
Culture
Differences in cultural acceptability
Age
Important factor in determining whether or not a person is a criminal
Specific circumstance
E.g a woman stealing food to feed her hungry child we wouldn't want to say is a criminal
Deviance approach: classifying behaviour as a crime if it breaches codes of socially acceptable behaviour
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